chapter 4 terms

the process of receiving stimulus energies from the external environment and transforming those energies into neural energy

perception

the process of organizing and interpreting sensory information so that it has meaning

bottom-up processing

the operation in sensation and perception in which sensory receptors register information about the external environment and sent it up to the brain for interpretation

top-down processing

the operation in sensation and perception, launched by cognitive processing at the brain's higher levels, that allows the organism to sense what is happening and to apply that framework to information from the world

snesory receptors

specialized cells that detect stimulus information and transmit it to sensory (afferent) nerves of the brain

absolute threshold

the minimum amount of stimulus energy that a person can detect

noise

irrelevant and competing stimuli-not only sounds but also any distracting stimuli for our senses

difference threshold

the degree of difference that must exist between two stimuli before the difference is detected

wweber's law

the principle that two stimuli must differ by a constant minimum percentage to be perceived as different

subliminal perception

the detection of information below the level of conscious awareness.

signal detection theory

a theory of perception that focuses on decision making about stimuli in the presence of uncertainty

attention

the process of focusing awareness on a narrowed aspect of the enviornment

selective attention

the process of focusing on speceific aspect of experience while ignoring others

perceptual set

a predisposition or readiness to perceive something in a particular way

sensory adaptation

a change in the responsiveness of the sensory system based on the average level of surrounding stimuli

retina

the multilayered light-sensitive surface in the eye that records electromagnetic energy and converts it to neural impulses for processing in the brain

rods

the receptor cells in the retina that are sensitive ot light but not very useful for color vision

cones

the receptor cells in the retina that allow for color perception

optic nerve

the structure at the back on the eye, made up of axons of the ganglion cells, that carries visual information to the brain for further processing

feature detectors

neurons in the brain's visual system that resppond to particular features of a stimulus

parallel processing

the simultaneous distribution of information across different neural pathways

binding

in the sense of vision, the bringing together and integration of what is processed by different neural pathways or cells

trichromatic theory

theory stating that color perception is produced by three types of cone receptors in the retina that are particularly sensitive to different, but overlapping, ranges of wavelengths

opponent-process theory

theory stating that cells in the visual system respond to complementary pairs of red-green and blue-yellow colors; given cell might be excited by red and inhibited by green, whereas another cell might be excited by yellow and inhibited by blue

figure-ground relationship

the principle by which we organize the perceptual field into stimuli that stand out (figure) and those that are lef over (ground)

gestalt psychology

a school of thought interested in how people naturally organize their perceptions according to certain patterns

depth perception

the ability to perceive objects three-dimensionally

binocular cues

depth cues that depend on the combination of the images in the left and right eyes and on the way the two eyes work together

convergence

a binocular cue to depth and distance in which the muscle movements in our two eyes provide information about how deep and/or far away something is

monocular cues

powerful depth cues available from the image in one eye, either the right or the left

apparent movement

the perception that a stationary object is moving

perceptual constancy

the recognition that objects are constant and unchanging even though sensory input about them is changing

outer ear

the outermost part of the ear, consisting of the pinna and the external auditory canal

middle ear

the part of the ear that channels sound through the eardrum, hammer, anvil, and stirrup to the inner ear

inner ear

the part of the ear that includes the oval window, cochlea, and basilar membrane and whose function is to convert sound waves into neural impulses and send them to the brain

place theory

theory on how the inner ear registers the frequency of sound, stating that each frequency produces vibrations at a particular spot on the basilar membrane

frequency theory

theory on how the inner ear registers the frequency of sound, stating that the perception of a sound's frequency depends on how often the auditory nerve fires

volley principle

modification of frequency theory stating that a cluster of nerve cells can fire neural impulses in rapid succession, producing a volley of impulses

auditory nerve

the nerve structure that receives information about sound from the hair cells of the inner ear and carries these neural impulses to the brain's auditory areas

thermoreceptors

sonsory nerve endings under the skin that respond to changes in temperature at or near the skin and provide input to keep the body's temperature at 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit

pain

the sensation that warns us of damage to our bodies

papillae

rounded bumps above the tongue's surface that contain the taste buds, the receptors for taste

olfactory epithelium

the lining the roof of the nasal cavity, containing a sheet of receptor cells for smell

kinesthetic senses

senses that provide information about movement, posture, and orientation

vestibular sense

sense that provides information about balance and movement

semicircular canals

threee-fluid filled circular tubes in the inner ear containing the sensory receptors that detect head motion caused when we tilt or move our head and/or body